Rapid Accessibility Audit
Your Roadmap to Better Web Accessibility
Tired of Guessing at Accessibility Improvements?
It’s easy to get overwhelmed when considering web accessibility for your small business. Many businesses abandon their accessibility efforts because the process is just too intimidating.
It gets easier to make your business website inclusive and functional for users with disabilities once you know where to start. Clarity and quick iterations are the keys to establishing a sense of momentum.
It’s possible to get a straightforward accessibility action plan for your website.
Get Web Accessibility Testing from a Trusted Expert
The Rapid Accessibility Audit eliminates ambiguity and inaction from small business accessibility testing. Performed by a certified web accessibility specialist, the assessment identifies key high-value improvements that are immediately actionable and explains how these changes will positively impact users with disabilities.
If you’ve been looking for a better way to start tackling accessibility issues, this is the action plan you need.
What’s included:
- 12-point assessment of one webpage
- Report of findings and recommendations
- Screen recording to explain issues in detail
- Friendly email support 😊
All delivered in 4-5 business days.
100% Money-Back Guarantee
If the Rapid Accessibility Audit does not meet your expectations, drop me an email and I’ll refund your purchase.
The Rapid 12-Point Assessment
The Rapid 12-Point Assessment is a unique testing framework that combines the top WCAG violations and the most common issues reported in recent ADA lawsuits. It’s designed to identify fixes that can improve your website’s accessibility by up to 80%.
The assessment will test the following:
- Proper alt text on images
- Proper labels on form inputs
- Proper links and link states
- Clear keyboard focus state
- Page titles & headings
- Color contrast for text
- Text sizing with zoom
- Skip link for keyboard users
- Navigable menu for keyboard users
- Touch target sizing
- No autoplay media
- Closed captions & transcripts
What My Clients Say
Frequently Asked Questions
There are two clear advantages to choosing a Rapid Accessibility Audit. First, a rapid audit costs less. A comprehensive audit can cost anywhere from $1,500-5,000, depending on the scope of the audit. Second, you get actionable feedback in less time. A comprehensive audit can take a month or longer to complete, while a rapid audit only takes one week.
The Rapid Accessibility Audit is not designed to serve as a full assessment of Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) compliance. If you make improvements based on the recommendations from this audit, you will improve the accessibility of your website significantly.
If you are looking for help with full WCAG compliance, check out my Ongoing Accessibility Support service. Establishing a plan for ongoing support is key for maintaining web accessibility, and through the Ongoing Accessibility Support service, I will help achieve your WCAG compliance goals.
It depends on that developer’s role. Web developers are responsible for many areas of your website’s overall needs (e.g., building new features, optimizing for performance, troubleshooting bugs). In most cases, your developer has a full plate with other responsibilities related to your website’s ongoing needs. Consulting with a web accessibility specialist is a better choice in terms of subject matter expertise and is usually more cost-effective than performing an internal audit.
No. The Rapid Accessibility Audit is meant to identify accessibility issues and make recommendations on how improvements can be made. No remediation work is included with this product. If you need help with remediation, check out my Ongoing Accessibility Support service.
Heck yeah! Just email me at matt@litzdigital.com.
Want To Dig Deeper?
Discover how web accessibility can positively impact your business.
Why your business can’t ignore accessibility
When most business owners hear the term “web accessibility,” they think of compliance headaches or legal liability. It can feel like another item on an already overwhelming to-do list. But accessibility isn’t just the right thing to do – it’s smart business.
The 80/20 rule for accessibility testing
Recently, I was looking at data from an accessibility audit and had a lightbulb moment. I noticed that the majority of issues found during a site-wide audit were discovered in just the first few pages tested. I’m calling this discovery the 80/20 rule for accessibility testing.
Perfect doesn’t exist: why progress beats paralysis in accessibility work
It’s easy to feel stuck when it comes to accessibility. There’s a mountain of WCAG guidelines, legal pressure, and no shortage of opinions about what perfect accessibility looks like. But here’s the truth: Perfection isn’t the goal. Progress is.